🌿 Family First Aid Safety - mixed
First Aid covering mixed ages (0-18 Years)
Overview
Family life doesn’t fit neatly into one age group. From babies to teenagers, each stage brings different risks and different needs.
Family First Aid is a practical 2-hour workshop designed for families with children across multiple ages. This session provides a broad, accessible foundation, helping you understand how to respond to common emergencies across childhood stages.
This is real-life first aid for real-life parenting.
This is not a formal paediatric first aid qualification course.
It is a parent-focused confidence workshop designed for real-life family settings.
Who Is This For?
-
Families with children of different ages
-
Grandparents
-
Carers supporting mixed age groups
-
Parents wanting a general first aid foundation
No prior experience required.
What’s Included
Each participant receives:
-
Practical CPR and choking practice
-
Guided demonstrations and supported practice
-
A Family Safety Confidence Guide
-
Attendance certificate
1
What You Will Learn
During this workshop, you will learn how to:
-
Perform infant and child CPR
-
Respond to choking
-
Treat burns and scalds
-
Recognise and respond to head injuries
-
Manage allergic reactions
-
Respond safely to seizures
-
Understand when to call 999
-
Apply calm emergency response principles
2
Topics Covered
-
Infant and child CPR overview
-
Choking across age stages
-
Burns and scalds
-
Head injuries
-
Allergic reactions
-
Seizures
-
When to call 999
-
Calm emergency response principles
3
How Long Is the Workshop?
Duration: 2 hours
Format: In-home group session (up to 6 participants included)
Delivery style: Interactive, hands-on, scenario-based
Larger community and school sessions are available on request.
4
Investment
Pilot Offer: £10 per person (minimum of 6 participants)
Available until October 2026
Usual price:
£195 (up to 6 participants included)
Additional participants: £20 per person
​
When shared between 6 parents, this works out at approximately £32 per person.
​
​